DeathAndTaxes
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Gerald Davis
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November 19, 2013, 06:02:23 PM |
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Miners have ALWAYS had the freedom to pick which txs they want to include in blocks. If you feel miners shouldn't have that freedom then you probably should have done more research before getting involved in Bitcoin.
Tx selection will only grow more complex in the future. Some miners may simply sign deals with large merchants to provide a quality of service for their tx. VIP clients will have all tx to their addresses jump to the front of the line. I think that type of arrangement is only a matter of time.
Miners have the freedom to choose tx selection. Miners aren't obligated to give your tx priority. That has been the "rules of the game" since the genesis block. If you have done so little research that this didn't occur to you, well I would recommend some critical thinking.
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mootinator
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November 19, 2013, 06:09:08 PM |
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Miners have ALWAYS had the freedom to pick which txs they want to include in blocks. If you feel miners shouldn't have that freedom then you probably should have done more research before getting involved in Bitcoin.
Well the solution to this problem for now is clearly for the 50% of us who aren't blinded by ideology to keep our hashing power as far away from Eligius as possible. Don't get me wrong, I'm convinced not reusing addresses is the way to go, I just don't need Luke-Jr trying to force the extra cost on everyone.
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No
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DeathAndTaxes
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Gerald Davis
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November 19, 2013, 06:12:14 PM |
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Miners have ALWAYS had the freedom to pick which txs they want to include in blocks. If you feel miners shouldn't have that freedom then you probably should have done more research before getting involved in Bitcoin.
Well the solution to this problem for now is clearly for the 50% of us who aren't blinded by ideology to keep our hashing power as far away from Eligius as possible. What does 50% have to do with anything? This isn't a hard fork or change in core protocol, it doesn't need your or anyone's approval. Each INDIVIDUAL miner (or indirectly through the pool they choose) have the freedom to prioritize tx as they see fit. They always have and they always will. That isn't going to change with or without 50% support. However I agree as a miner you should select a pool who's views are aligned with your own. Either you construct your own header and are in direct control of transaction selection, or you "vote" with your hashing power however this patch can be used by anyone at anytime and requires no consensus.
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mootinator
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November 19, 2013, 06:14:44 PM |
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Miners have ALWAYS had the freedom to pick which txs they want to include in blocks. If you feel miners shouldn't have that freedom then you probably should have done more research before getting involved in Bitcoin.
Well the solution to this problem for now is clearly for the 50% of us who aren't blinded by ideology to keep our hashing power as far away from Eligius as possible. What does 50% have to do with anything. This isn't a hard fork or change in core protocol. I agree as a miner you should select a pool who's views are aligned with your own. You "vote" with your hashing power however this patch can be used by anyone at anytime and requires no consensus. EACH INDIVIDUAL miner have the freedom to prioritize tx as they see fit. That isn't going to change with 50% or 99.9%. 50% has to do with the current poll result... The sum of the 'this is unequivocally a bad idea' responses.
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No
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murraypaul
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November 19, 2013, 06:16:52 PM |
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Miners have ALWAYS had the freedom to pick which txs they want to include in blocks. If you feel miners shouldn't have that freedom then you probably should have done more research before getting involved in Bitcoin. [...] If you have done so little research that this didn't occur to you, well I would recommend some critical thinking. I know that, I'm not sure why you feel the need to be condescending in every reply. Does that also mean that people shouldn't debate the rules that miners use, for example in an attempt to persuade or dissuade other miners from adopting the same policies? Isn't that what this thread is for?
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BTC: 16TgAGdiTSsTWSsBDphebNJCFr1NT78xFW SRC: scefi1XMhq91n3oF5FrE3HqddVvvCZP9KB
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mootinator
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November 19, 2013, 06:36:19 PM |
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Also, as much as black addresses are entirely unworkable, green addresses do actually provide a nice benefit.
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No
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Carlton Banks
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November 19, 2013, 09:06:58 PM |
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Also, as much as black addresses are entirely unworkable, green addresses do actually provide a nice benefit.
Anyone who insists on being paid from a "green" address can start digging around the blockchain to try to find out how much BTC you're holding. Not such a benefit. There's a blockchain based solution to providing a credible ID when making purchases in the works, designed by the Bitcoin main dev team. It's a far superior scheme to this green addresses nonsense.
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Vires in numeris
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deepceleron
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November 19, 2013, 10:23:13 PM |
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Also, as much as black addresses are entirely unworkable, green addresses do actually provide a nice benefit.
Anyone who insists on being paid from a "green" address can start digging around the blockchain to try to find out how much BTC you're holding. Not such a benefit. There's a blockchain based solution to providing a credible ID when making purchases in the works, designed by the Bitcoin main dev team. It's a far superior scheme to this green addresses nonsense. I pay you, the money comes from the known mtgox green address and is deducted from my balance. How much bitcoin do I have? It's not how much bitcoin mtgox has. You know that mtgox won't double-spend so you can immediately trust the payment. That's a green address.
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Luckybit
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November 19, 2013, 10:36:39 PM |
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So you mean BTC is mainly adopted by people wants 100% privacy? On the contrary, it's possible that the majority haven't adopt BTC just because of the anonymity. Most of people heard of BTC but haven't convinced to use them because they think the government will not allow such things to exist. The main objective of BTC foundation is not to increase its anonymity, but to explain to the authority that it's not as anonymous as they think. This isn't about anonymity. If the government wants to know who you are, they'll subpoena your landlord to tell them. Are you saying the majority of people want the unknown to-be-rapist down the street to know their every purchase, telling him where you've been and what you buy? They want the pedophile-to-be to know when and where they drop their children off at childcare? I understand the argument you make here and agree with it. I also understand you have good intentions trying to force developers to respond. I disagree with removing choice from the user. Not every user desires or requires privacy. If it's a government address such as the FBI or a non-profit then they'll be able to have privacy too. In the case of the FBI they might want that privacy, in the case of the non-profit they likely don't want it, and people want and expect complete transparency from a non-profit. So certain addresses in my opinion should be persistent addresses. If you want to discourage the use of persistent addresses then attach a fee to miners to allow specific addresses to be persistent if that fee is paid.
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Xian01
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Christian Antkow
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November 20, 2013, 01:10:46 AM Last edit: November 20, 2013, 01:52:20 AM by Xian01 |
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Appears to be an unnecessary knee-jerk reaction for something that is not a genuine problem.
Luke, I know we don't see eye-to-eye on things, but respectfully, I don't see any benefit to this proposal.
EDIT: BurtW, and so you did, post #12. Guess that's why the term was on muh brain. Cheers.
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BurtW
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All paid signature campaigns should be banned.
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November 20, 2013, 01:16:42 AM |
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Appears to be an unnecessary knee-jerk reaction for something that is not a genuine problem.
Luke, I know we don't see eye-to-eye on things, but respectfully, I don't see any benefit to this proposal.
I thought exactly the same thing when I first heard about it, in fact I also called it a "knee jerk reaction", but after carefully reading the posts, especially those from gmaxwell, I have come to the conclusion in my signature. If coins of different ancestry become different in value then Bitcoin is reduced from "money" to "collectible" just like coins of different grades have different values in the marketplace. I, for one, would like Bitcion to develop as money, not collectibles.
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Our family was terrorized by Homeland Security. Read all about it here: http://www.jmwagner.com/ and http://www.burtw.com/ Any donations to help us recover from the $300,000 in legal fees and forced donations to the Federal Asset Forfeiture slush fund are greatly appreciated!
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Carlton Banks
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November 20, 2013, 02:10:31 AM |
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Also, as much as black addresses are entirely unworkable, green addresses do actually provide a nice benefit.
Anyone who insists on being paid from a "green" address can start digging around the blockchain to try to find out how much BTC you're holding. Not such a benefit. There's a blockchain based solution to providing a credible ID when making purchases in the works, designed by the Bitcoin main dev team. It's a far superior scheme to this green addresses nonsense. I pay you, the money comes from the known mtgox green address and is deducted from my balance. How much bitcoin do I have? It's not how much bitcoin mtgox has. You know that mtgox won't double-spend so you can immediately trust the payment. That's a green address. Not those green addresses. We have a new definition, courtesy of our new friends at the CoinValidation organisation, and it involves linking real world identities to Bitcoin users and put in a public database. The idea is to create regulatory legislation (in the US) that demands for businesses to only accept money from ID validated green addresses.
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Vires in numeris
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darkmule
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November 20, 2013, 02:55:42 AM |
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Luke, I know we don't see eye-to-eye on things, but respectfully, I don't see any benefit to this proposal. I'd say about the same thing, except I'd conclude by replacing "benefit" with "harm." This isn't going to cause any harm to anyone, and it might cause some benefit. For all the heat generated, where's the innocent victim its opponents can point at and cry "this person was harmed!" There is no such person. It may or may not be a good idea. However, what Luke has done seems to be the least intrusive measure possible to find out. Whether or not he has strong opinions against what he is trying to discourage, what he has actually done is to discourage it. . .slightly. By expressing mild disapproval of it. And suggesting that he might express slightly less mild disapproval of it in the future. In other words, a future intention to deprecate. . .maybe! I can live with this. ETA: Also that poll sucks. Sorry. Really, it needs an answer that amounts to "let's collect some data and see how it works." Because that's what I would have clicked, and it seems to be what you're actually doing. Good idea! But there should have been a way to approve of that.
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mootinator
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November 20, 2013, 04:48:10 AM |
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Not those green addresses. We have a new definition, courtesy of our new friends at the CoinValidation organisation, and it involves linking real world identities to Bitcoin users and put in a public database. The idea is to create regulatory legislation (in the US) that demands for businesses to only accept money from ID validated green addresses.
But this change does break those green addresses. Interesting attempt to deflect the issue though. And those green addresses not maintained by a central authority allow people to not have to wait anywhere from 2-60 minutes for confirmations. If there's something better in the pipeline, that's fine but it really does break behaviors people are relying on.
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No
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kano
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Linux since 1997 RedHat 4
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November 20, 2013, 09:57:10 AM |
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... This isn't going to cause any harm to anyone, and it might cause some benefit. ...
It affects anyone who wants to use a single address - if they do, then the transactions to that address will be slowed down by it. i.e. it slows down committing for anyone that use a single address for payment, if they receive more than one payment per block - yes that includes Satoshi Dice - but any site that uses that design. Now, what is gained by it? Enforced privacy coz people MUST have it? Yet when you commit a payment with an amount greater than any incoming transaction you use to pay out, you immediately invalidate this argument. Completely. I really don't understand why people must be FORCED to use this - i.e. get pools to enforce this rule. Can someone answer why it MUST be done - and why the current system CAN'T be allowed to continue. Why can't people have choice? You CAN implement the option of accepting payments to choose to use a new address every time - so people who want that can have it. But why are people trying to FORCE this as mandatory? Seems like: "We know better, we will tell you what you should do and we want to force you to do it" Sounds very religious to me ...
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klee
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November 20, 2013, 10:16:14 AM |
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You're an idiot, don't do this! - 109 (43.6%)
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killerstorm
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November 20, 2013, 11:01:02 AM |
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But why are people trying to FORCE this as mandatory?
Seems like: "We know better, we will tell you what you should do and we want to force you to do it" Sounds very religious to me ...
My thoughts, exactly. I've been trying to find real arguments for doing it now in this thread, but it looks like it is all FUD.
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BurtW
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November 20, 2013, 01:44:53 PM |
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For what it is worth, I was totally against this proposal as well. This is one of the posts that convinced me this (fungibility) is a critical issue: https://bitcointalk.org/index.php?topic=334316.msg3588908#msg3588908Now I consider the proposal just a "baby step" in the right direction. We actually need to implement BIP32 system wide and come up with even more ideas to make it as hard as possible to implement those ideas that are floating around that will destroy the fungible property of Bitcoin. The battle over the fungibility of Bitcoin is the battle for Bitcoin itself. If fungibility is destroyed then Bitcoin will eventually become just a footnote in history. As I have said, if you remove the fungible nature of Bitcoin - as is being proposed - then Bitcoin becomes a collectible and is no longer money. If you have any other/better ideas to help preserve fungibility then we need to hear them now! Please!
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Our family was terrorized by Homeland Security. Read all about it here: http://www.jmwagner.com/ and http://www.burtw.com/ Any donations to help us recover from the $300,000 in legal fees and forced donations to the Federal Asset Forfeiture slush fund are greatly appreciated!
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giszmo
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November 20, 2013, 02:04:52 PM |
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If you have any other/better ideas to help preserve fungibility then we need to hear them now! Please!
How is ZeroCoin doing? I read they are going to start an alt coin and have the transaction size down to very reasonable 500B but they didn't answer my question if cpu use made similar progress.
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ɃɃWalletScrutiny.com | Is your wallet secure?(Methodology) WalletScrutiny checks if wallet builds are reproducible, a precondition for code audits to be of value. | ɃɃ |
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zimmah
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November 20, 2013, 03:21:23 PM |
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what's so bad about address reuse anyway?
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